Title :
Implementation Methodology for Interoperable Personal Health Devices With Low-Voltage Low-Power Constraints
Author :
Martínez-Espronceda, Miguel ; Martínez, Ignacio ; Serrano, Luis ; Led, Santiago ; Trigo, Jesús Daniel ; Marzo, Asier ; Escayola, Javier ; García, José
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Public Univ. of Navarre (UPNA), Pamplona, Spain
fDate :
5/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Traditionally, e-Health solutions were located at the point of care (PoC), while the new ubiquitous user-centered paradigm draws on standard-based personal health devices (PHDs). Such devices place strict constraints on computation and battery efficiency that encouraged the International Organization for Standardization/IEEE11073 (X73) standard for medical devices to evolve from X73PoC to X73PHD. In this context, low-voltage low-power (LV-LP) technologies meet the restrictions of X73PHD-compliant devices. Since X73PHD does not approach the software architecture, the accomplishment of an efficient design falls directly on the software developer. Therefore, computational and battery performance of such LV-LP-constrained devices can even be outperformed through an efficient X73PHD implementation design. In this context, this paper proposes a new methodology to implement X73PHD into microcontroller-based platforms with LV-LP constraints. Such implementation methodology has been developed through a patterns-based approach and applied to a number of X73PHD-compliant agents (including weighing scale, blood pressure monitor, and thermometer specializations) and microprocessor architectures (8, 16, and 32 bits) as a proof of concept. As a reference, the results obtained in the weighing scale guarantee all features of X73PHD running over a microcontroller architecture based on ARM7TDMI requiring only 168 B of RAM and 2546 B of flash memory.
Keywords :
IEEE standards; biomedical electronics; biomedical measurement; medical computing; microcontrollers; open systems; software architecture; ubiquitous computing; ARM7TDMI; IEEE11073 standard; International Organization for Standardization; LV-LP technologies; PoC devices; X73PHD compliant agents; X73PHD compliant devices; X73PHD implementation design; X73PHD implementation methodology; X73PoC; battery efficiency constraints; computational contraints; e-Health solutions; interoperable personal health devices; low power constraints; low voltage constraints; medical device standards; microcontroller based platforms; microprocessor architectures; patterns based approach; point of care devices; standards based personal health devices; ubiquitous user centered paradigm; Biomedical monitoring; Computer architecture; Hardware; Microcontrollers; Protocols; Random access memory; Software; International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/IEEE11073 standard; Interoperability; low voltage low power (LV-LP); microcontroller architecture; patterns-based design; personal health device (PHD); Electronics, Medical; Home Care Services; Humans; Individualized Medicine; Medical Informatics; Medical Informatics Applications; Microcomputers; Monitoring, Ambulatory; Point-of-Care Systems; Telemedicine;
Journal_Title :
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TITB.2011.2134861